CMU research featured on PBS

Advances in neuroscience and computational learning developed in the basement of Wean Hall will be featured in the second episode of the PBS series “Brains on Trial with Alan Alda,” which airs this Wednesday.

The episode, narrated by actor and science advocate Alan Alda, features collaborative research among Carnegie Mellon University’s professor of psychology Marcel Just of the Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging, chair of the machine learning department Tom Mitchell, and assistant professor of social and decision sciences Karim Kassam. Just, Mitchell, and Kassam’s research revealed unexpected similarities among people’s neural representations of concrete objects and specific emotions. Just and his colleagues had method actors from Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Drama internalize specific emotions under an fMRI scanner. From these scans, researchers developed a computer-generated algorithm to identify emotions that actors were portraying.

“It turns out there is an enormous commonality across people. This was never known before — that our neural representations of objects, of emotions — of other things, are common. Our brains all use the same code,” Just said.

“One of the most amazing facets of this research is that when you think of what an apple is, things go on in your brain, and you have brain activation patterns,” Just added. “...[T]he amazing thing is it’s the same thing that happens in my brain.”

These neurological patterns exist not only for objects like apples, but also for abstract emotions like anger. The identification of these common neural patterns has profound implications for the criminal justice system, where the technology may help identify the presence of remorse or other motivation.

“It’s nice to have video tape, it’s nice to have eye witnesses, but we also have to take into account what the accused perpetrator was thinking,” Just said. “Were they really planning to stab someone for weeks and weeks, or did they trip while carrying the knife?”

Just acknowledged that several hurdles remain before this technology is ready for use in the courtroom.

“With this technique, you still can’t tell whether this person is sincere or not. But one of the experiments that Karim and I have on the drawing boards is having sincere versus fake remorse, sincere versus fake anger,” he said.

This research provides evidence for the theory of a biological basis of emotion and the foundations for reading others’ thoughts and can have implications in the field of human-computer interaction.

For a copy of the study “Identifying Emotions on the Basis of Neural Activity” (Just et. all, 2013) featured in the PBS segment, see http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3A
doi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0066032.